How do I beat this pos character named highlander

I have 100 reps and in this whole time of playing i can probably count the times I've beaten this character on my hand. there are a few characters that i hate with a passion that i feel most of the community agrees on, but highlander is the bane of my existence and sole reason I have left any match in this god forsaken game. what do y'all do fight highlander because I for the life of me cannot fight this abomination. his lights are too fast; I just get barraged with kicks and then I get thrown which 90% of the time catches me mid dodge somehow. and his dodge attack are always just making my attacks useless. even on my main character I'm just left in a yamcha pose with a teabagging highlander desecrating my corpse. this post is made with pure hatred and is a desperate cry for help.

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u/TheGenericName318 — 17 hours ago
▲ 10 r/Korean

Hello, I'm a Korean guy in college living in Georgia. Growing up, my parents were both fluent in Korean, but never really spoke it around the house. They tried taking me to korean school for a few weeks but i hated it cuz the teachers were terrible. Now that im older, i do learn languages as a hobby. I have tried multiple times to learn Korean, but for some reason, it just doesn't stick. For other languages I learn, I find multiple reasons and interests for that language. whether it be music, media, history, food, or just finding the language interesting enough to learn. I've tried to find these reasons in Korean, but they're all boring or straight up just not my taste. I love korean food and growing up i was still around korean language and culture, so its not like i know anything. I've seen many people online talk about being ashamed or avoiding learning Korean as an asian american, but to be honest, I don't really feel that. The language is simply not interesting to me, and if I'm being honest, neither is the culture. My whole dilema is that it feels wrong to say that and feels wrong to not learn korean simply for the fact that i am korean and that i feel like i should as a korean person. At the same time, I feel like I'm making this a bigger issue than it is, since not even my parents are putting any pressure at all on me to learn it. I feel like if I weren't Korean, I would still have pursued the languages I have and not looked at Korean. I wanted to ask if anyone else has felt like this. Where finding an interest or a reason besides being korean has been difficult. Or if there is anyone on here that is maybe in the same situation as me but still powering through.

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u/TheGenericName318 — 2 months ago

I’m Korean and in college. My family is Korean but we never really spoke it much around the house growing up. Despite both my parents being immigrants and fluent in Korean, me and my siblings are pretty “Americanized” but it’s not as if we know nothing about Korean culture. I love learning languages and usually there are things that draw me to and motivate me to learn that language. Whether it be media, music, food, or simply finding the language itself interesting. For some reason Korean is the language I am struggling to sit down and take time to learn. I feel like if I wasn’t Korean, I wouldn’t even consider learning it at all. I wanted to ask if anyone else has felt like this, where you’ve began learning other languages, but found your family’s language to be something you don’t take to well or struggle finding a connection for. I’m also wondering if you could offer any advice for this particular struggle.

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u/TheGenericName318 — 2 months ago